| Eveline Lubbers on Fri, 21 Sep 2001 12:09:42 +0200 (CEST) |
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| [Nettime-nl] PR in the War |
Nog een mooie verzameling bronnen, gemaakt door
PR Watch, deze selectie heeft als invalshoek
media en het bespelen ervan.
gr
eveline
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The Weekly Spin, Wednesday, September 19, 2001
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SPONSORED BY PR WATCH (www.prwatch.org)
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Weekly Spin features selected news summaries with links to further
information about current public relations campaigns. It is emailed free
each Wednesday to subscribers. Feel free to forward this message to
others.
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2. "THE PEACEFUL ATOM IS A BOMB"
For decades opponents of nuclear energy have warned that each
reactor and disposal site is a potential bomb capable of causing
thousands of civilian deaths and billions of dollars in damage if
struck by the type of terrorist attack witnessed September 11th.
Such precautionary warnings were given little credence or dismissed as
anti-nuclear fearmongering in the past. Now that the unthinkable has
occurred, the terrorist threat to nuclear facilities is being generally
acknowledged. An article on today's Associated Press wire by William
Kole in Vienna, Austria, states that "little can be done to shield a
nuclear power plant from an airborne assault. ... A direct hit of a
nuclear plant by a modern jumbo jet traveling at high speed 'could
create a Chernobyl situation,' said a U.S. official who declined to be
identified.
SOURCE: Wisconsin State Journal, September 18, 2001
3. UNDERSTANDING TERRORISM
Like everyone else in the United States, the staff at PR Watch has
been struggling to understand the horrors of last week and the best path
forward. The following stories provide some valuable perspectives that
have been largely absent from mainstream media coverage:
* The Atlantic Monthly reported in May 1996 on the U.S.
government's own role in training and organizing both the Taliban
and Osama Bin Laden to fight the Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
Another, more detailed report on this history appeared recently in
Jane's Defense Weekly.
* More recently, a former CIA operative wrote an article in
July 2001 deploring the failings of U.S. intelligence in the
region.
* The Independent of London has published a detailed biography
of Osama bin Laden, and Esquire magazine has posted a lengthy 1999
profile and interview with bin Laden. (Interviewer John Miller
notes that "bin Laden's approach to questions could have been
taught by an American public-relations adviser: First, get out your
message. Then, if you like, answer the question.")
* The Guardian of London examines the reasons why some people
hate the United States, and warns, "for every 'terror network' that is
rooted out, another will emerge -- until the injustices and inequalities
that produce them are addressed."
* For those who favor a military solution, Robert Fisk paints
a chilling picture of the dangers awaiting U.S. ground troops in
The Lessons of History: Afghanistan Always Beats Its Invaders. Fisk
warns that Bush is walking into a trap, "heading for the very disaster
that Osama bin Laden has laid down for him."
Web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000702802
4. JOURNALISM'S SURREAL REALITY CHECK
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A40404-2001Sep16.html
"Suddenly, dramatically, unalterably the world has changed,"
observes Washington Post media critic Howard Kurtz. "And that means
journalism will also change, indeed is changing before our eyes. The
presidency will become a constant focus in ways not seen since the
height of Ronald Reagan's struggle against the so-called Evil Empire.
Reporting on the military, the spy services, diplomacy and global
terrorism will heat up after years of back burner status." Kurtz also
thinks that government censorship of the press may see a revival.
"During World War II, reporters wore uniforms and submitted to
censorship," he writes. "During Vietnam, much of the press turned
against that agonizing conflict, fueling the Nixon administration's
covert war against the Fourth Estate. ... 'We have lived in an
environment where the media in this country has been able to establish
an independent and adversarial relationship, even when American lives
could be lost,' says Alex Jones, director of Harvard's Joan Shorenstein
Center on the Press. 'I think the government and the military are going
to want to renegotiate the deal.' The terms will include 'what is
considered fair game, what is considered appropriate lines of
questioning, what is reasonable disclosure of embarrassing information.
... There's going to be pressure to get in line -- much more pressure
for self-censorship and coerced censorship of any information on what
our intelligence capabilities are.' "
SOURCE: Washington Post, September 17, 2001
5. POWELL TATE LOBBIES FOR STAR WARS
http://www.odwyerpr.com/0917missile.htm
Boeing is using Interpublic's Powell Tate unit to build PR support
for President Bush's missile defense system. Bush's request for
$8.3 billion for missile defense was expected to be sliced due to
the vanishing surplus, but now has gotten new life in aftermath of
last week's terror attacks. This contradicts Kevin McCauley's
prediction in last week's O'Dwyer's PR Daily. McCauley wrote that
the terrorist attacks "killed Bush's missile defense program. No
Star Wars system would have been effective against the grisly
attacks on the WTC and the Pentagon. ... The country does not need
Star Wars to fight terrorism. It needs better intelligence. America
needs agents who can infiltrate terror organizations so they can been
destroyed from within."
SOURCE: O'Dwyer's PR Daily, September 17, 2001
More web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000702800
7. AMERICA'S COUNTERPART TO THE TALIBAN
http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/2001/09/14/more_god/index.html
As might be expected, last week's terrorist bombings have energized some
of the most extremist and intolerant segments of American society.
Conservative hatchet-gal Ann Coulter wrote a vitriolic column for the
National Review, calling for an American jihad against Muslim nations
"to invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert them to
Christianity." Jerry Falwell and Pat Robertson mused together on
Robertson's TV network that the attack was "probably what we deserve"
because of American tolerance for "the pagans, and the abortionists, and
the feminists, and the gays and the lesbians." To get an idea of how
Falwell's anti-feminist views match up against those of the Taliban,
check out the Feminist Majority Foundation's campaign to Stop Gender
Apartheid in Afghanistan.
More web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000665748
8. TV FANS THE FLAMES OF WAR, BUT COMMON DREAMS GO DEEPER
http://www.commondreams.org/
Common Dreams is one website providing an important alternative to
mainstream TV coverage. TV commentators are increasingly fanning
flames of war and rapid retaliation. "Americans are anxious to have some
sort of retaliation take place," National Public Radio and FOX TV
commentator Juan Williams stated today during FOX coverage featuring
stirring music videos of Tuesday's attack set to patriotic songs. Actor
and action-figure Chuck Norris appeared on Fox to declare that "good is
white and evil is black," saying he was "always against eliminating the
draft" and has been riveted to Fox TV. Another FOX guest commentator, a
retired military officer, declared this "World War Three." In the midst
of such rhetoric it is important to remember that after the 1991 war
against Iraq researchers from the University of Massachusetts found that
"the more television people watched, the fewer facts they knew; and the
less people knew in terms of basic facts, the more likely they were to
back the Bush administration," as reported by Lee and Solomon in their
book Unreliable Sources.
10. BUSH VS. THE TALIBAN
During part of Friday, Spin of the Day provided a link to a story
by Robert Sheer of the Los Angeles Times titled Bush's Faustian
Deal with the Taliban. We have discovered, however, that Sheer's
story was misleading and inaccurate. His story, written on May 22,
2001, reported that the Bush administration had given $43 million
to the Taliban as "an ally in the drug war. ... The gift ... makes
the U.S. the main sponsor of the Taliban." While it is true that
the Bush administration allocated aid to Afghanistan in May, the
aid package (which consisted in large part of surplus U.S. wheat)
was intended to prevent millions of Afghans from starving to death. In
announcing the aid package, Secretary of State Colin Powell made a point
of criticizing the Taliban, not just for failing to cooperate with U.S.
efforts to extradite Osama bin Laden, but also for contributing to mass
hunger in Afghanistan. Powell said the U.S. aid would be administered by
the United Nations and non-governmental organizations and would bypasses
the Taliban, "who have done little to alleviate the suffering of the
Afghan people, and indeed have done much to exacerbate it." Powell's
announcement was supported even by the Feminist Majority Foundation,
which of course deplores the Taliban's discrimination against women. The
actual facts surrounding this aid package were reported at the time on
CNN. For a further critique of Sheer's misleading story, see the
critique on Spinsanity.org. We apologize for our role in circulating,
however briefly, misinformation at this difficult moment in America's
history.
Web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000581806
11. BEATING THE DRUM FOR PEACE, UNDERSTANDING & JUSTICE
http://www.alternet.org
Now that the U.S. government has declared war in response to
Tuesday's horrific act of terrorism, the often impressive reporting of
the past few days by mainstream media could, as in previous wars, give
way to a resonant drumbeat for revenge. Just when cautious response,
political criticism, wise analysis, public education and more just
international policies are most needed, diverse voices and opinions may
be drowned out or declared un-American. Fortunately, unlike previous
U.S. wars, today there exist alternative sources of news, analysis and
commentary that are accessible by anyone on the globe with a computer
modem. Alternet is one leading source beating the drum for peace,
understanding and justice.
12. PALESTINIANS RESPOND TO THE ATTACK
http://electronicintifada.net/coveragetrends/rejoicing.html
Following Tuesday's terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the
Pentagon, U.S. television has repeatedly broadcast footage that shows
Palestinians celebrating. The Electronic Intifida, which supports the
Palestinian uprising in Israel, says this coverage is misleading. "The
overwhelming number of Palestinians, like people of all nationalities,
were sickened by the events in New York and Washington," it states.
"Palestinians with relatives in New York and Washington spent much of
yesterday worriedly trying to phone to check they were safe, exactly as
many Americans did. Palestinian citizens of the United States will also
turn out to be among the victims of the tragedy. Whatever a group of
20-40 Palestinian children happened to be doing yesterday morning in
Nablus is no more representative of all Palestinians than the Klu Klux
Klan rally -- which happened recently just down the road from where I
live, in St. Paul, Minnesota -- is representative of all Americans." The
news section of the Electronic Intifada also features statements by U.S.
Muslim and Arab groups, condemning the terrorist attacks and calling on
Muslims nationwide to offer whatever assistance they can to help the
victims.
More web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000365432
13. HOW TO DEFEAT BIN LADEN
http://www.salon.com/news/feature/2001/09/13/justice/index.html
"If, as appears increasingly likely, groups associated with
terrorist mastermind Osama bin Laden are found to be responsible
for Tuesday's murderous attacks in New York and Washington, the
United States would be fully justified in taking vigorous action to
apprehend and punish him and to put his terror networks out of
business," observes Michael Klare. "The question then becomes: What
strategy will best accomplish this objective?" Klare recommends a
strategy of "global law enforcement collaboration plus moral and
religious combat." The war against terrorism is a war of ideas as well
as weapons. "To prevent the recruitment of additional volunteers into
bin Laden's networks (or others of their type), we have to successfully
portray him as an enemy of authentic Islam," Klare says. "Bin Laden has
succeeded in recruiting followers up until now -- volunteers who are
willing to sacrifice their lives -- because he has been able to portray
himself as the true defender of Islam. Now, we must seek out and ally
ourselves with the vast number of Muslims who are repelled and horrified
by the death of so many innocent people in New York and Washington. We
must encourage influential Muslim clerics to condemn bin Laden as an
enemy of true Islamic belief."
SOURCE: Salon.com, September 13, 2001
15. HORROR BEYOND WORDS
http://www.odwyerpr.com/0912worldtrade.htm
John O'Dwyer of O'Dwyer's PR Services, which is headquartered in
Manhattan, has written a firsthand account of the terrorist attack
on the World Trade Center. Anthony Lappé at the Guerilla News
Network has also written a personal dispatch, titled Terror from
the Skies.
More web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000326552
16. WHAT DOES TERROR MEAN IN A MEDIA WAR?
http://www.tompaine.com/opinion/2001/09/12/1.html
"Terrorism is a new kind of warfare, tailor-made for the
Information Age," observes John Rieger. "Terror spreads with the
news. It's a war of impressions, of ideas, of symbols."
TomPaine.com has also compiled a terrorism reader in an effort to
comprehend the incomprehensible.
SOURCE: TomPaine.com, September 12, 2001
More web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000270800
17. PR NEWSWIRE OPENS WIRES
http://www.holmesreport.com/holmestemp/story.cfm?edit_id=1377&typeid=1
PR Newswire opened its wires to companies whose crisis
communications plans were activated by the attacks on the World
Trade Center as a public service. The newswire sent out an e-mail
to members at approximately 11a.m. The message read: “For PR
Newswire members whose crisis communication plan has been activated by
today's World Trade Center and Washington, D.C. crises, we are making
the wire available as a public service without charge.” Reporters and
editors looking for corporate updates on today's tragedies are being
directed to a dedicated section of the PR Newswire news file.
SOURCE: The Holmes Report, September 11, 2001
More web links related to this story are available at:
http://www.prwatch.org/cgi/spin.cgi?date=September%202001#1000184400
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